Melmark, Inc. v. Schutt, A. ( 2017 )


Menu:
  • J-A08033-17
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    MELMARK, INC.                              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant                :
    :
    :
    v.                              :
    :
    :
    ALEXANDER SCHUTT, AN                       :   No. 2253 EDA 2016
    INCAPACITATED PERSON, BY AND               :
    THROUGH CLARENCE E. SCHUTT                 :
    AND BARBARA ROSENTHAL SCHUTT,              :
    HIS LEGAL GUARDIANS, AND                   :
    CLARENCE E. SCHUTT AND BARBARA             :
    ROSENTHAL SCHUTT, INDIVIDUALLY             :
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered June 24, 2016
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County
    Civil Division at No(s): 13-01572 Civil Action
    BEFORE:      PANELLA, LAZARUS, JJ., and STEVENS*
    MEMORANDUM BY STEVENS, P.J.E.:                             FILED JULY 19, 2017
    Appellant, Melmark, Inc. (“Melmark”) appeals from the judgment
    entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County in Melmark’s
    action raising claims of unjust enrichment and quantum meruit. We affirm.
    This case presents a “choice of law” question bearing on whether New
    Jersey residents Dr. Clarence Schutt and Barbara Rosenthal Schutt (“the
    Schutts”) are personally liable for the unpaid balance for specialized services
    rendered to their severely autistic, 31 year-old son, Alexander Schutt
    ____________________________________________
    *
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A08033-17
    (“Alex”), by Melmark, a Delaware County, Pennsylvania residential care
    facility assisting individuals with intellectual disabilities and autism.       New
    Jersey’s   filial   support   law   would   shield   the   Schutts   from   financial
    responsibility for Alex’s care because they are over age 55 and Alex is no
    longer a minor. Pennsylvania’s filial support law, meanwhile, would provide
    no age-based exception to parental responsibility to pay for care rendered to
    an indigent adult child. See, infra.
    Presiding over Melmark’s action against the Schutts, the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County identified a conflict between the laws and
    resolved it in favor of the Schutts.        Specifically, the court concluded that
    New Jersey had a greater interest in insulating its elderly parents of adult
    indigent children from such collection efforts than Pennsylvania had in
    compelling out-of-state parents to pay an indigent adult child’s bill to a
    private provider.
    The attached trial court opinion provides as detailed a factual and
    procedural history as can be offered, and we need not repeat such detail,
    herein.    Suffice it to say that Dr. and Mrs. Schutt, 71 and 70 years old,
    respectively, reside in Princeton, New Jersey, and availed themselves of New
    Jersey public funding to pay for Alex’s care at Melmark from 2001 to 2012.
    In 2011, however, the New Jersey Department of Developmental
    Disabilities (NJDDD) did not approve Melmark’s rates, and it notified the
    Schutts that relocation of Alex would soon be necessary.             NJDDD offered
    Alex placement at Bancroft House, in Mullica Hill, New Jersey, but the
    -2-
    J-A08033-17
    Schutts protested about the facility’s lack of oxygen systems onsite and its
    refusal to waive its policy of requiring legal guardians to consent to the use
    of non-emergency restraints.
    NJDDD advised the Schutts that if they did not agree to the transfer,
    NJDDD would cease payments to Melmark as of March 31, 2012.                   The
    Schutts elected against placing Alex at Bancroft and filed an appeal to the
    New Jersey Office of Administrative Law, which was denied. On March 31,
    2012, the Schutts did not take custody of Alex, leaving Melmark to care for
    him without receiving payment.
    On August 27, 2012, the Schutts filed an “Application for Emergent
    Relief” in New Jersey courts requesting immediate restoration of New Jersey
    funding   for   Alex’s   care   at   Melmark   pending   the   outcome   of   the
    administrative appeal.
    Melmark, meanwhile, on July 31, 2012, had filed a Pennsylvania
    Commitment Petition in Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, Orphans’
    Court Division, asking the County Mental Health or PA Department of
    Welfare to take custody of Alex.       The Schutts opposed this petition, and
    argued in open court that a “funding dispute” between Melmark and NJDDD
    was at the root of this issue, and that their upcoming New Jersey hearing
    regarding their administrative appeal would resolve the problem.
    The Delaware County Orphans’ Court sided with the Schutts, as it
    identified the issue in the case as one involving “a funding dispute between
    -3-
    J-A08033-17
    NJDDD and Melmark . . . that can be resolved at the January 16, 2013 [New
    Jersey] Appeals Hearing].”
    Thereafter, the Schutts voluntarily canceled the upcoming hearing, and
    in so doing, eliminated any opportunity they alleged was available to obtain
    payment from NJDDD for Melmark’s services to Alex.       Because of Alex’s
    increasingly aggressive behaviors, Melmark transported him to a New Jersey
    crisis center on May 15, 2013.
    Therefore, from April 1, 2012, to May 14, 2013, Melmark provided
    Alex with services without receiving payment.   With basic services costing
    $356.34 per day at seven days a week, and “Adult Day Program” costs of an
    additional $221.99 per day at five days a week, Alex’s total unpaid
    residential services amounted to $205,236.38.
    Melmark filed its Complaint on February 20, 2013 in the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County.       The court denied the parties’ cross-
    motions for summary judgment and set a bench trial date of January 12,
    2016. After testimony, trial exhibits, and briefs/memoranda of counsel, the
    court found in favor of Melmark on its claims against Alex, by and through
    his parents as legal guardians, as to Count I, Unjust Enrichment, and Count
    II, Quantum Meruit, in the amount of $205,236.38.
    The court, however, found in favor of the Schutts, individually, and
    against Melmark as to Counts I, Unjust Enrichment, Count II, Quantum
    Meruit, and Count III, Common Law Duty of Support.        Notably, the trial
    -4-
    J-A08033-17
    court applied New Jersey’s filial support law to deny Melmark’s claims
    against the parents in this respect.
    The trial court relied on several bases to support its decision in favor of
    the Schutts.     Initially, the court noted that the law upon which Melmark’s
    position relied, the Pennsylvania Filial Support Law,1 directs that “the
    ____________________________________________
    1
    Section 4603, “Relatives’ liability; procedure” provides, in pertinent
    part:
    (a) Liability.--
    (1) Except as set forth in paragraph (2), all of the following
    individuals have the responsibility to care for and maintain or
    financially assist an indigent person, regardless of whether the
    indigent person is a public charge:
    (i) The spouse of the indigent person.
    (ii) A child of the indigent person.
    (iii) A parent of the indigent person.
    (2) Paragraph (1) does not apply in any of the following cases:
    (i) If an individual does not have sufficient financial ability
    to support the indigent person.
    (ii) A child shall not be liable for the support of a parent who
    abandoned the child and persisted in the abandonment for a
    period of ten years during the child's minority.
    (b) Amount.--
    (1)   Except as set forth in paragraph (2), the amount of liability
    shall be set by the court in the judicial district in which the
    indigent person resides.
    ****
    23 Pa.S.C.A. § 4603.
    -5-
    J-A08033-17
    amount of liability shall be set by the court in the judicial district in which
    the indigent person resides.”    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 4603(b)(1).     Because both
    parties stipulated that Alex was a resident and domiciliary of New Jersey at
    all times, the court concluded that, even if it were to apply Pennsylvania law
    to Melmark’s claims, Section 4603(b)(1) divested the court of authority to
    set an amount owed because the court clearly does not exist in the judicial
    district where the parties agreed Alex resides.
    Assuming, arguendo, that Section 4603(b)(1) would confer authority
    upon the court to set the amount due, the court undertook a choice of law
    analysis pursuant to Pennsylvania precedent, see infra. The court identified
    a conflict between Pennsylvania and New Jersey’s filial support laws, and it
    determined that, because New Jersey has the most significant contacts or
    relationships in the present controversy, New Jersey has the greater interest
    in the application of its law.
    Melmark filed the present appeal and raised the following questions:
    DID DELAWARE COUNTY ORPHANS’ COURT ERR WHEN IT
    DETERMINED THAT NEW JERSEY’S FILIAL SUPPORT LAW—
    INSTEAD OF PENNSYLVANIA’S FILIAL SUPPORT LAW—APPLIED
    WHEN THIS DISPUTE INVOLVES A FAILURE TO PAY FOR
    SERVICES PROVIDED BY A PENNSYLVANIA NOT-FOR-PROFIT
    ORGANIZATION OPERATING IN PENNSYLVANIA?
    DID THE COURT ERR WHEN IT FOUND IT LACKED THE ABILITY
    UNDER THE PENNSYLVANIA FILIAL SUPPORT STATUTE, 23
    PA.C.S. § 4603, TO SET THE AMOUNT DUE IN THIS MATTER?
    DID THE LOWER COURT ERR IN NOT ENTERING A VERDICT OR
    JNOV IN FAVOR OF MELMARK UNDER PENNSYLVANIA’S FILIAL
    SUPPORT LAW?
    -6-
    J-A08033-17
    DID THE LOWER COURT ERR IN NOT ENTERING A VERDICT OR
    JNOV IN FAVOR OF MELMARK UNDER THE THEORIES OF UNJUST
    ENRICHMENT AND QUANTUM MERUIT?
    Appellant’s brief at 3-4.
    Melmark contends, first, that the court erred when it applied New
    Jersey law rather than Pennsylvania law to the question of whether the
    Schutts were financially liable for all unreimbursed expenses incurred by
    Melmark in supporting Alex.            According to Melmark, New Jersey’s filial
    support law at N.J.S.A. §§ 44:1-139 and 1-1402 has no application to the
    ____________________________________________
    2
    Section 44:1-139, “Obtaining or compelling assistance of relatives,”
    provides:
    Upon application for the relief of a poor person an overseer1 shall
    ascertain if possible the relatives chargeable by law for his support
    and proceed to obtain their assistance or compel them to render such
    assistance as is provided by law.
    1
    Now municipal director of welfare, see N.J.S.A. § 44.1-73.2.
    N.J.S.A. § 44:1-139.
    Section 44:1-140, “Relatives Chargeable,” provides:
    a. The father and mother of a person under 18 years of age who
    applies for and is eligible to receive public assistance, and the
    children, and husband or wife, severally and respectively, of a person
    who applies for and is eligible to receive public assistance, shall, if of
    sufficient ability, at his or their charge and expense, relieve and
    maintain the poor person or child in such manner as shall be ordered,
    after due notice and opportunity to be heard, by any county or
    municipal director of welfare, or by any court of competent
    jurisdiction upon its own initiative or the information of any person.
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
    -7-
    J-A08033-17
    present matter because the sole purpose of the scheme is to allow New
    Jersey to seek contribution from family members of an indigent person
    under 18 years old who is receiving public assistance funds. Notably, New
    Jersey was not supplying public assistance funds during the time about
    which Melmark complains, i.e., April 1, 2012, to May 14, 2013.
    Therefore, Melmark maintains, there existed no conflict of law between
    New Jersey’s and Pennsylvania’s respective filial support laws, as New Jersey
    had no interest in the present case, where a Pennsylvania non-profit, alone,
    was seeking reimbursement.
    It is well-settled that a dispute concerning the applicable substantive
    law compels a choice of law analysis. Wilson v. Transport Ins. Co., 
    889 A.2d 563
    , 571 (Pa.Super. 2005). “Substantive law is the portion of the law
    which creates the rights and duties of the parties to a judicial proceeding,
    _______________________
    (Footnote Continued)
    b. The provisions of this section shall apply to the minor children of a
    mother whose husband shall fail properly to support and maintain
    such children when by reason thereof they are likely to become a
    public charge.
    c. The provisions of this section shall not apply to any person 55
    years of age or over except with regard to his or her spouse, or his or
    her natural or adopted child under the age of 18 years.
    N.J. Stat. Ann. § 44:1-140.
    -8-
    J-A08033-17
    whereas procedural law is the set of rules which prescribe the steps by which
    the parties may have their respective rights and duties judicially enforced.”
    
    Id. A court
    conducts the choice of law analysis under the choice of law rules
    of the forum state. See Griffith v. United Air Lines, Inc., 
    416 Pa. 1
    , 21,
    
    203 A.2d 796
    , 805 (1964).
    “The first step in a choice of law analysis under Pennsylvania law is to
    determine whether a conflict exists between the laws of the competing
    states.” Budtel Associates, LP v. Continental Cas. Co., 
    915 A.2d 640
    ,
    643   (Pa.Super.    2006).      “If   no    conflict   exists,   further   analysis   is
    unnecessary.” 
    Id. If the
    court finds a true conflict exists, the court must
    then decide which state has the greater interest in the application of its law,
    including which state had the most significant contacts or relationship to the
    action. 
    Id. See also
    Troxel v. A.I. DuPont Inst., 
    636 A.2d 1179
    , 1180-
    81 (Pa.Super. 1994) (noting relevant inquiry is “the extent to which one
    state rather than another has demonstrated, by reason of its policies and
    their connection and relevance to the matter in dispute, a priority of interest
    in the application of its rule of law.”).
    Initially, we address whether the trial court erred in discerning a
    conflict of law between the Pennsylvania and New Jersey filial support laws.
    Melmark argues that since the present action did not involve a New Jersey
    agency attempting to recoup public funds expended for Alex’s care, New
    Jersey’s statutory regime has no application in Melmark’s action for
    reimbursement against the Schutts.
    -9-
    J-A08033-17
    While there is no dispute that the entity seeking reimbursement is
    private rather than public, we disagree with Melmark’s position that the New
    Jersey statutory scheme evinces no purpose to shield elderly parents from
    collection efforts for services rendered to an adult indigent child who had
    received public assistance for the majority of his stay with the provider and
    continues to remain eligible for public assistance.
    Implicit in the law’s inclusion of age-based limits is the legislative
    intent to exempt elderly parents such as the Schutts from filial support
    responsibility for adult indigent children eligible for public assistance.   As
    noted by the trial court, Alex has been the recipient of public assistance,
    through Medicaid, Social Security Disability benefits, and the NJDDD since
    2004. “At all relevant times,” the court indicates, “Alex paid and continues
    to pay most of his Social Security Disability benefits to NJDDD to contribute
    to the services provided by NJDDD.” Trial Court Opinion at 19. Thus, the
    record establishes that Alex had sought and received public assistance
    through the state of New Jersey for the majority of the relevant time period,
    and he remains eligible for New Jersey assistance despite the fact the
    inability of NJDDD and Melmark to agree on payment terms.
    We, therefore, agree with the trial court that the New Jersey statutory
    scheme reflects a legislative purpose to protect its elderly parents from
    financial liability associated with the provision of care for their public
    assistance-eligible indigent adult children under the present circumstances.
    The purpose is plainly manifest in the language of N.J.S.A. 44:1-140 and is
    - 10 -
    J-A08033-17
    appropriately put into effect where, as here, elderly parents have depended
    on New Jersey payments to a private health care provider for many years
    and   where   they   have   made    sincere   efforts   to   secure   appropriate
    replacement services once New Jersey and the provider could no longer
    agree on payment terms.
    Having identified such a protective purpose in the New Jersey law
    distinguishes the present matter from a federal decision upon which Melmark
    relies.   In Eades v. Kennedy, PC Law Offices, 
    799 F.3d 161
    (2d Cir.
    2015), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals found no conflict between the
    Nursing Home Reform Act (NHRA) and Pennsylvania’s indigent support
    statute because there was “[n]othing in the NHRA indicates that its purpose
    is to shield family members of nursing home residents from financial
    responsibility for the residents’ medical care[.]” 
    Id. at 172.
    All provisions of
    the law, the circuit court observed, pertained to the provision of quality care
    for nursing home residents.
    In contrast, the New Jersey law in question expressly contemplates
    shielding elderly parents of adult indigent children from support obligations.
    Eades, therefore, is inapposite to the present matter, and it offers no
    support for Melmark’s position denying the existence of a conflict between
    New Jersey’s and Pennsylvania’s filial support laws. Accordingly, we discern
    no error with the trial court’s opinion recognizing a conflict between the
    Pennsylvania and New Jersey filial support statutes as applied to the present
    matter.
    - 11 -
    J-A08033-17
    Even if a conflict does exist, Melmark argues, it is Pennsylvania that
    enjoys the stronger interest in having its filial support law applied, as the law
    was designed to allow Pennsylvania facilities providing care for indigent
    persons in Pennsylvania to secure payment from responsible family
    members. This purpose is especially pertinent in the present case, Melmark
    argues, because the Schutts took legal steps that prolonged Alex’s stay in
    Pennsylvania after NJDDD stopped paying for his expenses.
    According to the Schutts, the State of New Jersey has the most
    significant interest because its relevant statute is a “family law support” law,
    and the location of one’s domicile provides the primary and ultimate
    reference for the court in deciding choice of law issues.          Here, Alex’s
    permanent domicile has always been his family’s New Jersey home, making
    New Jersey “the state with the most central relationship to the family unit.”
    Appellees’ brief at 10-11.
    These considerations should be controlling, the Schutts maintain,
    particularly where Melmark wishes to use the Pennsylvania filial support
    statute as a debt collection tool rather than as a means by which to maintain
    the continued support of the indigent. It is New Jersey that has the primary
    responsibility to establish and regulate the support obligations of New Jersey
    citizens, the Schutts emphasize, such that its interest in this matter would
    be impaired by application of Pennsylvania filial support law.
    Upon conducting a full examination of party briefs, the certified record,
    and our standard of review pertaining to choice of laws issues, as set forth
    - 12 -
    J-A08033-17
    above, we find that the trial court’s opinion provides a cogent and
    comprehensive discussion rejecting Melmark’s claims and supporting its
    opinion that New Jersey’s interest in the application of its filial support law
    was paramount. See Trial Court Opinion at pp. 18-21. In this regard, the
    court’s opinion subordinates Pennsylvania’s interest as one involving not the
    provision of care for the indigent but, instead, the collection of a private debt
    for   services   rendered   after   New   Jersey   withdrew   funding   from   a
    Pennsylvania institution. New Jersey, on the other hand, had an interest in
    protecting elderly New Jersey parents from caring for their adult child, also a
    New Jersey resident, consistent with New Jersey law. Finding no abuse of
    discretion or error of law in the court’s assessment, we uphold its decision to
    apply New Jersey’s filial support law to Melmark’s claims seeking parental
    support from the Schutts.
    Having determined that the Schutts were under no obligation under
    New Jersey law to finance Alex’s stay at Melmark after NJDDD withdrew
    funding, it follows that they experienced no personal enrichment during this
    latter portion of Alex’s stay, contrary to Melmark’s final claim for quantum
    meruit.
    Quantum meruit is essentially a claim for unjust enrichment, which
    “implies a contract [and] requires the defendant to pay to the plaintiff the
    value of the benefit conferred.”     Durst v. Milroy, 
    52 A.3d 357
    , 360 (Pa.
    Super. 2012).     In a quantum meruit action, the plaintiff must prove: (1)
    [the] benefits conferred on defendant by plaintiff; (2) appreciation of such
    - 13 -
    J-A08033-17
    benefits by defendant; and (3) acceptance and retention of such benefits
    under such circumstances that it would be inequitable for defendant to retain
    the benefit without payment of value.        See 
    id. The application
    of the
    doctrine depends on the particular factual circumstances of the case at
    issue. Schneck v. K.E. David, Ltd., 
    666 A.2d 327
    , 328 (Pa. Super. 1995).
    Again, for the reasons expressed in the trial court’s opinion, we uphold
    the court’s determination that Melmark was not entitled to relief under a
    theory of quantum meruit. As the trial court observed, the Schutts had no
    legal obligation to care for their adult son, services were not rendered to the
    Schutts personally, and they never entered into a contract with Melmark in
    any capacity. Only Alex appreciated the benefits of Melmark’s services, the
    trial court concluded, and it was for that reason that the court entered
    judgment against Alex, by and through the Schutts in their fiduciary
    capacities and payable by the estate, and not in their individual capacities.
    For the foregoing reasons, judgment is AFFIRMED.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 7/19/2017
    - 14 -
    Circulated 06/23/2017 11:31 AM